D120. FOLDER TITLE
LIST FOR THE PAPERS OF J. LEE RANKIN; This is the listing of each folder of
the Rankin papers donated to the National Archives by the
family of J. Lee Rankin, counsel for the Warren Commission.
Over 40,000 pages make up this important collection. 29
pages

D165. WARREN COMMISSION
EXECUTIVE SESSION TRANSCRIPTS, Transcribed recorded
conversations—some
disturbing and startling—of the Warren Commissioners
and others on staff, purpose, evidence, direction, and
directives from President Johnson, the FBI and other government
agencies. A unique historical document. 517 pages

A public
relations counsel with offices in Washington, DC, and was
registered with the Department as an agent of Nicaraguan
and Israeli Governments. He was never an informant to the
FBI but in the past did furnish them with information relating
to Israeli and Latin-American activities, most of which
were of interest to other Government agencies to which
this data was disseminated. (CIA) Most documents included
in this batch are the result of an FBI investigation of
his office books under the Foreign Agents Registration
Act. Donated to JFK Lancer by Ed Sherry.

James P. Hosty, Jr. served
as an FBI special agent in Dallas during the time leading
up to the assassination of President Kennedy. He had interviewed
Marina Oswald twice before November 22, 1963, and bullettained
a file on Lee Harvey Oswald. After one of his interviews
with Mrs. Oswald, Lee Oswald delivered a threatening note
to Hosty. Hosty destroyed the note two days after the
assassination. Mr. Hosty donated this file to the National
Archives on January 24, 1997. The documents relate to
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the investigation
of Lee Harvey and Marina Oswald, the assassination of
President Kennedy, and Mr. Hosty’s employment with
the FBI. 56 pages

Previously unavailable taped conversations
of Carlos Marcello, the long-time head of organized crime
in New Orleans. In the late 1970s, the FBI investigated
Marcello in an operation code-named “BriLab,” which
stood for “Bribery of Organized Labor.” The
FBI conducted electronic surveillance on Marcello’s
home and office for approximately eight months. The Review
Board identified thirteen conversations that are relevant
to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and
is making them available to the public. ARRB Release 1998,
102 pages

D103. 1994 GAETON
FONZI INTERVIEW. Compliments
of Gordon Winslow and Gaeton Fonzi, we offer this extensive
interview. Mr. Fonzi was an investigator for the House
Assassinations Committee and author of the book, “The
Last Investigation. “ You will be intrigued by his
comments. Great interview.

$2.00

D145. Select Committee
On Assassinations US House of Representatives Report
of Fire Arm Examination Panel September 8, 1978. Not in the final report. 38 pages

D108. Clinton,
LA Witnesses' Statements.
Released April 9, 1996, these are the actual interview
statements from the Clinton witnesses (who saw LHO with
David Ferry and Clay Shaw) taken by Andrew J. Sciambra
and sent to District Attorney Jim Garrison in 1967. 22
pages.